Carl M. Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 8, 2009
Docket14-08-00291-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Carl M. Williams v. State (Carl M. Williams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carl M. Williams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 8, 2009

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-08-00291-CR

Carl M. Williams, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 339th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1097855

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Carl M. Williams was convicted of the felony offense of murder, sentenced to ninety years’ confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, and fined $10,000.  Williams challenges the judgment contending the evidence at trial is both legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction.  We affirm.

I

            On the morning of December 22, 2006, the Houston Police Department received a call that a body had been found in a bayou between Fondren Road and Sandpiper Drive.  After surveying the scene, officers concluded that the bayou was not the location of the shooting, but merely the place where the body was dumped. 

While investigating the shooting, officers discovered that a disturbance had occurred on December 21, in unit 2205 at the Los Arcos Apartments, which were close to the bayou.  When officers went to the apartment, some of the front windows were broken.  They asked Timothy Hilton, one of the tenants, if they could search the apartment, and he consented.  In the entryway, the officers could see that someone had recently replaced a large section of carpet.  Broken glass was not only outside the front of the apartment, but officers also found broken glass outside the back bedroom window.  Crime-scene investigators found blood spots near the replaced carpet, as well as cleaning supplies—bleach and a mop—inside the residence. 

Hilton accompanied the officers to a police station to give a statement.  When the officers returned with Hilton to the apartment, his mother, Connie Kennedy, was there, and they spoke to her about the disturbance.  The officers then took Hilton and Kennedy back to the station to get a statement from Kennedy and to clarify Hilton’s statement.  Following interviews with Hilton and Kennedy, the police were able to identify Carl M. Williams as a suspect in the complainant’s death.  After five months of searching, officers located Williams in May 2007.  They arrested and charged him with the complainant’s murder.

  During the trial, Hilton testified that his mother resided in unit 2205.  At the time of the shooting, Hilton lived with his mother.  Other residents of unit 2205 were Quwanda Davis, Williams, another person identified only as Drey, and the complainant.  Hilton stated that on December 21, he was in the apartment with all of the above identified occupants.  He testified that the complainant and Williams had “had words” earlier that day.  Later that evening, Williams became upset because he could not find his crack cocaine, and he accused Hilton of stealing it.  Hilton testified that Williams brandished a gun and began waving it at him while yelling “give me my stuff.”  All present, except Kennedy, began searching for the lost drugs.  Hilton testified that while he was looking for the drugs, Williams abruptly grabbed and pistol-whipped him.  He then stated that Williams forced him to strip-off his clothes to see if he was hiding the crack cocaine.  He testified that Davis told Williams that the complainant was laughing when Williams was beating Hilton and that Williams should force the complainant to strip as well.  Hilton said that Williams then forced the complainant to strip.  Because Williams did not find drugs on the complainant, Hilton went back to his room and continued searching for the drugs.  Hilton testified that Williams then grabbed Kennedy and held a gun to her head.  Hilton stated that while Williams was holding his mother, he told Hilton, “This is what’s going to happen to the old b**** if you don’t give me my drugs.”  Hilton testified that at first he could see Williams and his mother from the bedroom, but they moved out of his line of sight.  He stated that he heard a “pop,” and then he dove out the back bedroom window. 

Hilton testified that he later returned to the apartment, and he saw the complainant lying on the living room floor.  He stated that Williams and Davis, who were also at the apartment, left to buy supplies to clean up the scene.  After trying unsuccessfully to clean the carpet, Hilton cut up the bloody carpet and replaced it with a piece of clean carpet from the empty apartment next door.  Hilton testified that he cleaned the apartment along with Davis and Williams.  He stated that Williams suggested they dispose of the complainant’s body.  Williams retrieved an empty grocery cart, placed the body in it, and pushed the cart to the bayou between Fondren and Sandpiper.  Hilton testified that he was not strong enough to push the cart, so he walked beside Williams and occasionally pulled the cart.  Davis followed them in a car and, after they dumped the body, Davis drove them back to the apartment.  Hilton testified that the three of them proceeded to clean the apartment until early the next morning.  He stated that he helped Williams and Davis clean because he was afraid Williams would shoot him if he did not help.

Kennedy’s testimony varied from her son’s.  Kennedy testified that she never saw Williams point the gun at Hilton.  She also stated that Williams pistol-whipped Hilton after he put the gun to her head, rather than before.  Additionally, she testified that Williams did not force the complainant to remove all of his clothing, only his socks and shoes.  Kennedy stated that after the complainant took off his shoes, he suddenly jumped at Williams and grabbed for his gun.  She testified that when the complainant grabbed for the gun, she ran into the other room.  As she was running, Kennedy stated she saw Williams turn and face the complainant and then she heard them “tussling.”  She testified that she heard a “pop” and saw her son jump out the back bedroom window.  Finally, after the shot was fired, Kennedy stated that Davis and Drey ran out the front door followed shortly by Williams.  She testified that the complainant was shot, and he lay bleeding in her living room.  

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Carl M. Williams v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carl-m-williams-v-state-texapp-2009.